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Coping with the Collapse: A Stock-Flow Consistent Monetary Macrodynamics of Global Warming. Updated version: January 2017

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Listed:
  • Gaël Giraud
  • Florent MCISAAC
  • Emmanuel BOVARI
  • Ekaterina ZATSEPINA

Abstract

This paper presents a macroeconomic model of growth that combines the economic impact of climate change with the pivotal role of private debt and income distribution. Using a Keen approach (Keen, 1995) based on the Lotka-Volterra logic, we couple its nonlinear monetary dynamics of underemployment and income distribution with abatement costs. Various damage functions reflect the loss in final production and capital due to the rise in temperature. A calibration of our model at the world scale enables us to simulate various planetary scenarios. Our findings are threefold: 1) the +2°C target is already out of reach, absent negative emissions; 2) the long-run dynamic consequences of climate change on economic fundamentals may lead to a severe downside. Under plausible circumstances, global warming forces the private sector to leverage in order to compensate for output and capital losses; the private debt overhang may eventually induce a global financial breakdown, even before climate change could cause serious damage to the production sector. 3) Implementing an adequate carbon price trajectory, as well as increasing the wage share, fostering employment, and reducing private debt make it easier to avoid unintended degrowth and to reach a +2.5°C C target.

Suggested Citation

  • Gaël Giraud & Florent MCISAAC & Emmanuel BOVARI & Ekaterina ZATSEPINA, 2017. "Coping with the Collapse: A Stock-Flow Consistent Monetary Macrodynamics of Global Warming. Updated version: January 2017," Working Paper b6f3f098-ed24-44bf-9cdd-1, Agence française de développement.
  • Handle: RePEc:avg:wpaper:en7753
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Gaël Giraud & Matheus GRASSELLI, 2017. "The macrodynamics of household debt, growth, and inequality," Working Paper c15af656-d7a4-485c-867f-5, Agence française de développement.
    2. Nicolas Piluso & Edwin Le Héron, 2017. "La taxe carbone dans une économie d'inspiration keynésienne," Post-Print hal-01454866, HAL.
    3. José Manuel & Luna Romo González, 2018. "El riesgo de cambio climático en los mercados y las entidades financieras: retos, medidas e iniciativas internacionales," Revista de Estabilidad Financiera, Banco de España, issue MAY.
    4. 'Eric Herbert & and Gael Giraud & Aur'elie Louis-Napol'eon & Christophe Goupil, 2022. "Macroeconomic Dynamics in a finite world: the Thermodynamic Potential Approach," Papers 2204.02038, arXiv.org, revised May 2022.
    5. José Manuel & Luna Romo González, 2018. "The risk of climate change in financial markets and institutions: international challenges, measures and initiatives," Financial Stability Review, Banco de España, issue MAY.

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    • Q - Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics; Environmental and Ecological Economics

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